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Sunday, April 1, 2012

Indonesia's Batam island, an industrial zone with dreams of transforming into a major tourist destination, is sprucing itself up to lure big-spending visitors from next-door Singapore.
Batam is looking to emulate the success of another Indonesian island close to Singapore, Bintan, which is already a luxury beach and golfing destination after opening high-speed ferry links to the city-state in the 1990s.
To do so it will have to overhaul its image to tap into the spillover from the booming tourism market in Singapore, the city-state just a 45-minute ferry ride away.

With Malaysia's nearby Johor state luring more visitors to its Iskandar metropolis, islands, beaches, palaces and national parks, Batam faces stiff competition. Johor recorded 15 million foreign arrivals in 2011, 90 percent of them day-tripping Singaporeans.

Indonesian tourism officials say arrivals in Batam have stabilised at around one million annually for the past five years, many of them coming via ferry from Singapore, which welcomed more than 13 million visitors in 2011.
While nearly a third of the Singapore visitors were from Indonesia and Malaysia, the rest are tourists from other countries who Batam officials hope could be enticed to visit if it develops more attractions.
But while Batam's investors see an uncut diamond looking to progress from its transformation in the 1970s from tropical forest into a major industrial zone, it has its work cut out to reverse perceptions held by some tourists.
"It's so boring and I don't remember the beaches as being particularly nice," said Singaporean marketing manager Janet Tan, who recently flew to Bali with her husband and baby boy for a five-day break at four times the price."I am not interested in Batam at all."

With its large industrial sector and legions of migrant workers, Batam city is thoroughly urbanised, but outside the city, underdeveloped islets and coastal areas are being eyed by investors.
Ong Chih Ching, a Singaporean property developer, believes that despite its major industrial zones, Batam still boasts pristine beaches and a rustic charm.
Her company, the KOP Group, is bankrolling the upmarket Montigo Resorts project, which could help reverse Batam's reputation as a shabby place where Singaporeans set up factories -- and where some men keep Indonesian mistresses.
"I just felt that it is a gem that has not been polished and that's not very fair because people just don't give it a chance," said Ong, whose change of heart came when she went to view a vacant plot of land in 2008.
She made the decision immediately after viewing the property and the Montigo project, which cost Sg$110 million ($88 million), will feature 88 pool villas and 45 residences nestled on a hill with panoramic sea views.
The complex -- which claims to be Batam's first five-star resort -- will start operating in a few months.
"The existence of Montigo Resort of course provides another hope for the progress of the tourism industry of Batam," said Yusfa Hendri, head of the local tourism body.
"The project will also create trust and confidence for future investors."

Both Batam and Bintan are part of the Riau archipelago, which has long been overshadowed by Bali as a tourist destination.